What was she thinking?
Just 25 days before implementation,
why did NY Governor Kathy Hochul pull the plug on New York City’s congestion
pricing scheme in a move one
pundit called “the perfect clash of governmental incompetence meets
political malpractice”.
Five years in the
planning and studied over and over again, congestion pricing would have
charged drivers of the 700,000 vehicles that enter Manhattan each day below 60th
Street for the privilege: $15 for a car,
$24 - $36 for a truck. In addition to easing gridlock, the plan would also raise
$1 billion a year for the cash-strapped MTA to repair and improve mass
transit. That’s a win-win.
Just weeks ago Hochul was in
Europe touting congestion pricing as the “better way” to save New York
City. She called her leadership on this
issue “being bold” and said sometimes leaders have to make tough decisions and
stick with them.
And then she dropped this
bombshell without warning… not to members of the MTA Board, other political and
business leaders and not to environmentalists.
They are all livid.
IMPACT ON NEW YORKERS
Even before the Hochul
surprise, money is so tight at MTA that some capital plans have already been
put on hold. As for the extension of the
Second Avenue subway to 125th St?
It is effectively dead. So too
are plans to increase access to the subways for those with disabilities. And she claims about caring about the poor?
Of those in poverty living in
the city’s outer boroughs, only 2% of them drive into Manhattan while 61% use
mass transit. Most of the poor don’t
even own cars.
IMPACT ON CONNECTICUT
COMMUTERS
For Connecticut commuters to
NYC, the impact of Gov Hochul’s decision will be minimal. Planned expenditures on new railcars for
Metro-North will be paid for with state (and federal) funds, not money from the
MTA.
But even if congestion pricing
had gone into effect, Connecticut commuters wouldn’t really have been impacted. According to the MTA, 27,000 of our residents
take the train to NYC each day. Only
3100 people drive. And under congestion
pricing, those who, for whatever reason still chose to drive, could do so,
probably enjoying less traffic on their journey in return for their “toll”.
Of course, even if you take
Metro-North to Grand Central, your journey might then include a subway ride,
and that’s where Gov Hochul’s decision will be most felt with more crowding and
deteriorating service.
THE BOTTOM LINE
How will Hochul make up the
lost revenue that would have come from congestion pricing? By a new tax on businesses. How will that improve the city’s business climate
let alone repair the environment, the other big promise of congestion pricing?
Worst of all, this decision by
New York’s governor will cripple her administration’s credibility and just feed
everyone’s cynicism about politicians saying one thing and doing another. How can she make any deal, make any promise
or attempt to govern the Empire State after this flip-flop fiasco?
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